Chan in A Sentence

    1

    A few years later Mr Harrison worked at the codification of the law with Lord Westbury, of whom he contributed an interesting notice to Nash's biography of the chan cellor.

    2

    A fourth poetical metre is Chan, which, however, is not so much used as the others.

    3

    Almost oddly, Coogan isn't totally overshadowed by Jackie Chan.

    4

    An account of these translations will be found in The Principles of Buddhist Law by Chan Toon (Rangoon, 1894), which is the first attempt to present those principles in something approaching to a systematic form.

    5

    Even tho there are some dumb moments and an overblown finale, Chan and Wilson's chemistry makes the movie themselves.

    6

    For example, if you are Chinese American, you may give your child a Chinese first name with an American middle name, such as Chan Jason, or you may reverse it like Marie Lien.

    7

    Further south we visit the imperial citadel of Chan Chan.

    8

    His mid-air feinting kicks, spins and flips recall the mid-80s heyday of Jackie Chan, Sammo Hung and Yuen Biao.

    9

    Sir Thomas Roe, who visited it in 1614, found that the houses in the town were "only mud cottages, except the prince's house, the chan's and some few others."

    10

    The Chan 's Great Continent is an eminently readable book, which wears its scholarship lightly.

    11

    The Chan's Great Continent is an eminently readable book, which wears its scholarship lightly.

    12

    The southward movement of the Lao-Tai family from their original seats in south-west China is of very ancient date, the Lao states of Luang Prabang and Wieng Chan on the Mekong having been founded at least two thousand years ago.

    13

    They formed important settlements at various points on the Mekong, notably Luang Prabang, Wieng Chan (Vien-Tiane) Ubon and Bassac; and, heading inland as far as Korat on the one side and the Annamite watershed in the east, they drove out the less civilized Kha peoples, and even the Cambodians, as the Lao Pong Dam did on the west.